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Monday, February 29, 2016

Three Indian beaches among Asia’s top 10: Survey

However, none of the beaches from India feature in the category of the world’s best beaches.

India has three of the top 10 beaches in Asia favoured by travellers, a survey by travel website TripAdvisor said.
The beaches are Agonda, Palolem (both in Goa) and Radhanagar on the Havelock Island in the Andamans, according to TripAdvisor’s top 10 ‘Asia’s Travellers’ Choice Award-Winning Beaches’.
“India, with its extensive shoreline, is dotted with beautiful stretches of sand and it’s great to see these gems gaining recognition globally,” TripAdvisor India’s Country Manager Nikhil Ganju said.
Travellers’ Choice Award-winning beaches were determined on the quantity and quality of traveller reviews and ratings on the TripAdvisor website gathered over a 12-month period.
This year’s awards honour 343 beaches, including the top 10 in the world and lists for Asia, Africa, Australia, the Caribbean, Central America, Europe, South America, the South Pacific, the UK and the US.
Three of India’s beaches have featured in the list of top 10 beaches in Asia.
Agonda beach (Goa) has been ranked at number four position in the Asia top 10 list, mostly for being wide, quiet, picturesque and a great spot for sunbathing and relaxing with relatively few tourists around, the survey said.
Goa’s Palolem beach has been ranked 8th in the list for its beach hut accommodations.
Stretching between two magnificent head lands, Palolem beach is lined with towering coconut palms and is largely unspoiled. It is inhabited by local fishermen and foreign tourists alike.
Radhanagar Beach on the Havelock Island in the Andamans has been placed at number 10 in the list for its stretch of white sand with picture perfect waters lined with palm trees, it said.
Ngapali beach in Myanmar has topped the list, followed by Nacpan Beach in Philippines and Kata Noi beach in Thailand, it said.
Yapak beach in Philippines stood at number five, followed by Nai Harn beach in Thailand at number six and Sunrise beach in Thailand at the seventh spot, while Otres beach in Cambodia was ranked number nine, it said.
However, none of the beaches from India feature in the category of the world’s best beaches.
Grace Bay beach in the Caribbean has topped as the world’s number one traveller’s choice beach, followed by Baia do Sancho beach in Brazil and Playa Paraiso beach in Cuba, the survey said.
Karma is Action


Action that inspires confidence and removes doubt and suffering is wonderful karma.Karma in Buddhism is action.Action in the form of thinking.Thinking is acting. Speaking is acting. Doing things is acting. Every act has a result. That is karma. And nothing can be lost. It continues always.The shameful action continues and if you perform positive karma, it will continue very well if you help other people.So karma should be understood in a positive way also. To produce a type of loving kindness, compassion and understanding is a wonderful karma that can bring happiness to so many people.
To say something that inspires confidence and remove doubt and suffering, that is wonderful karma. And to do something to help people suffer less, that's wonderful karma, and that karma we encourage, and the Buddha always will produce this karma during his whole life. So Karma should not be seen only as something negative. Why the negative Karma should not be continued, should not continue the cycle of samsara.
The good karma should be included to be reborn and reborn because if you practice love and kindness, you produce love and kindness in your child, in your student. And if he continues, if she continues, she will practice love and kindness and will transmit to her children and that is why we encourage the continuation, the rebirth of the good things. We only want to discourage the continuation and the rebirth of bad karma.

Federalism In Structure, Pluralism Of Views


The Times Group follows a unique model, drawing on the Indian philosophy of anekantwad
The word federalism derives from the Latin word foedus, meaning pact, compact or treaty. The Times of India Group is a compact ­ an agreement that its many units, including its flagship brand, The Times of India, will chart their own destinies, while remaining a part of the collective. These entities, including TOI, need only to subscribe to a couple of overarching principles defining the federation: Break no laws, and do not secede.Otherwise, they are the masters of their individual domains, encouraged to carve out their own distinct identities and never required to follow one centrally determined “line“. Their freedom of thought and action is unlimited. This unique model is absolutely unparalleled in any disparate media company across the globe.
However, federalism for The Times Group is not a matter of expediency . Federalism defines the Group, in the sense that the inspiration comes from a civilisational Indian trait: Respect for individual autonomy and creativity , drawing deeply from the Indian philosophy of anekantwad, appreciation that truth is a land that can be approached from multiple paths.
Long before India was a nation-state, it was a collection of independent kingdoms and many peoples with their unique languages, traditions and cuisines. However, a certain tolerance for one another existed because of the overarching cohesive force of a similar set of principles and beliefs.Therefore, a federal structure ­ along with a certain unity founded on respect of each other despite the many diversities ­ thrived even before the audacious experiment that is modern India was born. In a sense, then, federalism has long been a part of the value system of most Indians, so it should come as no surprise that The Times Group takes to it so readily . Hence, behind that remarkable statistic, that TOI, the world's largest English language newspaper, is now over 175 years old ­ is a really simple, but deeply Indian philosophy .
Federalism in this Indian tradition is, therefore, a balance between two conflicting forces that always apply to any collective human endeavour ­ authority and liberty . Neither can exist on its own, both need to feed off each other, and they always challenge each other. Progress is a tug of war between authority and liberty .Federalism provides for the best solution to this conflict because, while there is an authority , the powers of that authority are limited by liberty , and those powers diminish as the collective grows.
The Times Group's federalism is, then, ultimately a reflection of its deep faith in liberty . Any collective needs an authority to stay together, but all constituents need liberty and freedom of thought and action if they , and the collective, are to evolve and flourish. A federal structure allows evolutionary dynamism; it frees all constituents from unitary determinism, the defining attribute of a centralised structure.
All of the above points to a basic underlying fact: Not only is there no central “line“ or policy or indeed one single “controller“ in The Times Group, but there is also a positive tendency towards “decontrol“.
To many in the media industry where ownership of media is towards an end or agenda, such a view is incomprehensible.But can a “control freak“ understand the mind of the “decontrol freak“?
One way would be to exemplify how this works on a day-to-day basis.
No one “House“ view or “line“. Total freedom for each separate media entity within The Times Group:
Given that The Times Group is federal by nature and instinct, many of its media entities have news and views that totally differ from each other.
For instance, Navbharat Times' coverage may often be opposite to that of TOI's. In fact, NBT is sometimes found to be running editorials with a headline that proudly proclaims “TOI ke virudh“! This can be unsettling for some, including editors of long experience who would otherwise claim they welcome opposite points of view; one TOI editor, for instance, was profoundly upset that his view, as articulated on the TOI's Edit page, had been totally opposed by his counterpart in the columns of NBT and demanded the setting up of an “editorial board for the Group“. He soon found another job.
Similarly , Anna Hazare's social “movement“ took most of the English press and its readers by storm not so long ago. However, keen observers would have noticed that The Times Group's Maharashtra Times was far more dispassionate and blase ... simply because its reporters had first-hand, decades-long experience of Anna Hazare's tacticsagitprop in Maharashtra ­ and had reported in depth about their impact at the local level.
Aconstant source of speculation is why and how, Times Now anchors are often seen fulminating against Pakistan, sometimes on the very same day when TOI may have run its Aman ki Asha campaign. In fact, Times Now's Arnab Goswami has been asked most indignantly several times on air by dumbfounded peaceniks from both sides of the border, how he can be allowed such a hard line of questioning on Pakistan, when the TOI happened to have been doing the opposite that very morning.
The answer is simple ­ the two entities are completely different, indeed in separate companies, with independent teams who rarely talk to each other but flaunt their freedom to follow their own “line“ as a rite of passage in their journalistic careers. There is no one “House line“ here. There can never be.
Diverse opinions, points of view often within the same newspaper:
The pluralism and freedoms described above are not just limited to different newspapers and TV channels across The Times Group ­ but occur within the same newspaper itself in many different ways.
For instance, the TOI often ends up saying the opposite thing on its News and Edit Opinion pages; this is aided by the fact that these two teams are not only separate, but also do not report in to the same editor.
In fact, the various editions of TOI are encouraged to write their own editorials to reflect local concerns and aspirations; what's more, their positions may not always be in line with the “view from New Delhi“.
Each edition of TOI is a separate franchise:
The pluralism at play is best exemplified by the franchise model across TOI.
Each edition of the TOI is often very different from another even as the overall look and feel remains similar. This is because each edition of TOI is a different franchise ­ albeit governed by a set of broad rules ­ in the same way as the Indian franchise of a foreign magazine like, say , Grazia, is different from its franchise in another country . As a result, each edition has a separate print line, with a different editor in charge. The task of the overall TOI editor, then, is to ensure that the independence of each editor is maintained, and to manage the system where these franchises run smoothly .
It is but obvious, then, that different resident editors are, for instance, at liberty to drop a story that is Page 1lead in a sister edition, and free to exercise their judgment on individual stories.Not only does this mean that a story of interest to Nagpur may not appear in Mumbai, but it would also mean that often, stories that one might read in South Mumbai or Bandra or Andheri, do not appear in even Navi Mumbai.
This is systematised wherein the TOI editor asks, for instance, editions to split their evening news lists into three sections ­ National, State and Local ­ based on each bureau chief 's judgment of the extent of relevance of a story . Obviously , there is an element of subjectivity inherent in any such sectionalisation. But the final decision on which “outstation“ stories to use, rests with individual editions, based on their mental and physical distance from the edition where a story originates.
The decentralised nature of TOI is underlined by the editor's observation in an internal note that even when he travels to editions outside Delhi and Mumbai, he consciously takes a backseat during the evening news meeting ­ as he does not trust himself to know for sure what Ahmedabad or Chennai or Bangalore or even Kolkata, should or should not play up on Page 1 or inside. “In Chennai, for instance, I'm told the obsession with Pakistan is far less than in Delhi“, he pointed out.
Why do we say “mental and physical distance“? Some years ago, the company decided to distribute the Bangalore instead of the Mumbai edition of The Economic Times in Kochi ­ due to proximity . But readers in Kochi weren't happy . They said they related more to the Mumbai edition, and it didn't matter that Bangalore was the nearest large city in south India.
All of this makes the editors' job of selecting stories that much more difficult.On any given day , even editions with relatively generous space are not able to use more than perhaps 10% of what the national network produces ­ because an overwhelming majority of stories are used only in the edition of origin, and nowhere else. There is nothing wrong with that ­ 95% of the stories that even Pune or Nagpur produce, do not appear in Mumbai; similarly , most of the stories that Mangalore or Mysore or Hubli produce, do not make it into the Bangalore edition.
Any insistence, then, on all editions carrying the same story with the same emphasis, would therefore mean trying to enforce a single line, and would go against all the precepts outlined above ­ of federalism and liberty ­ and would militate against the Group's dharma of plurality .
A question that is often asked is, if there are scores of media units in The Times Group's federal structure, and if all of them have the freedom to differ with one another, then which of the Company's many units best embodies the “Times“ belief system?
The answer is: All of them.
This is only achieved because in terms of operational philosophy , The Times Group's many publications and divisions are free to do what they want, and the federal authority (the management) encourages diversity that is truly unparalleled across any media company in the world.
The advantage this confers over a model that emphasises “a House line“ or “view“ is this: A federal media company structure allows all its publications to evolve, in different ways, with different views, approaches and at different paces, in response to different challenges and consumer needs. The Times structure allows units to react with speed and seize unexpected opportunities as they see fit.This makes the Group larger than the sum of its many parts.
A centralised authority works on the principle that it knows best, that all constituent units must receive their wisdom from a single person or body , and that there is one view. This limits every unit's ability to be unique and different ­ and change and cater to their relevant readersviewers.



Source: Times of India, 29-02-2016
Bengal village teen bags top Nasa scholarship
Kolkata:


Eighteen-year-old Sataparna Mukherjee, a Class 12 student from a village around 30km from Kolkata, has been selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) for its prestigious Goddard Internship Programme under the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS).She is among five scholars chosen from across the world for this programme.Nasa's GIP selects five exceptional individuals from across the world every year and funds their entire education after school.
Sataparna, who will appear for her school-leaving exams this year from St Judes School, Madhyam gram, in Kamduni -it gai ned notoriety for a bruta gangrape in 2013 -will be at Oxford University , where she she will pursue graduation post-graduation and PhD (as Nasa faculty) in aerospace engineering at its London Astrobiology Centre.
Sataparna told TOI, “It all started in May last year when I was a member of a group on a social networking site where there were many members, including some scientists. One day I shared some of my thoughts on `Black Hole Theory', and one of the members of this group gave me Nasa's official web site and told me to post my findings, which I did.“
Sataparna's paper on Black Hole Theory , and how this could be used to create a `Time Machine', was hugely appreciated. “I am very happy to get this opportunity where I will also work as a researcher at the Nasa centre in London,“ she said.
Under the Goddard In ternship Programme, Sataparna will work as an “employee and researcher“, where she will be part of its earth science and technology development programme. Nasa is paying her a generous sum as honorarium, apart from bearing all her expenses.
Her father Pradip Mukheree, a headmaster of a primary school who led a people's movement against goons and political pressure to drop the infamous June 2013 Kamduni gang-rape case, said, “She has made us, and the entire country , proud.“
Pulak Chakraborty , a professor of English at the Nabagram Hiralapal College, who's acting as Sataparna's referee at Oxford, said, “She is a very good student and her ability should not be judged through her marks alone. She is original, and that has made her attain so much.“
“She is going on August 17,“ said Pradip. “Though every cost is borne by the uni versity and Nasa, we will arrange for the passage money, which is quite high. I am thinking of taking a loan because I don't want to let this opportunity go,“ he said.
Source: Times of India, 29-02-2016

Saturday, February 27, 2016

OSU, IndoGenius develop Online Course to Educate Students about India -



Ohio State University (OSU) – one of the largest universities in the US and Delhi-based IndoGenius have developed an online course to help students learn about the importance of India.
The course, launched by Ambassador to India, Richard Verma, will be delivered via the world’s largest online course platform, Coursera.
Funded through the US Department of State’s Passport to India initiative, the massive open online course (MOOC) will be jointly managed by Ohio State and IndoGenius.
Passport to India seeks to enhance the number and diversity of American college and university students studying abroad and interning in India by 2020.
The course curriculum was developed by Brian Joseph, a distinguished professor of Linguistics at Ohio State University and Nick Booker, co-founder of IndoGenius, and implemented through the Office of Distance Education and eLearning.
Titled, “The Importance of India”, the course covers a broad range of topics, from India’s ancient trade relations with the Roman Empire, South East Asia and China to India’s rapidly growing startup ecosystem and its role in creatively solving global problems through technology.
By educating students about India through the MOOC, Ohio State and IndoGenius are expecting that it will make a major contribution toward meeting Passport to India’s goal of increasing the number of students studying abroad in India annually from its current, 4,583 to at least 10,000 in the coming four years.

Source: Elets News Network (ENN) Posted on February 22, 2016 -

What it means to be ‘national’

Nationalism that developed in India during the anti-colonial struggle was sui generis, an altogether new phenomenon the like of which the world had not seen earlier. It was essentially a democratic and egalitarian nationalism, as opposed to the aggrandising European form.

When students of my university are being accused of being “anti-national”, it is time to ask the question: what does “national” mean? And the answer is not as simple as many imagine. The terms “national”, “nationalism” and “nation-state” came into vogue in Europe after the Westphalian Peace Treaties in the 17th century. But European “nationalism” had three major characteristics. First, it was never inclusive of the entire population even within the territory of the “nation”. It always invoked an “enemy within” (example, the Jews). Second, it was necessarily imperialistic. Within months of the Westphalian Treaties, Oliver Cromwell had attacked Ireland (the first ever colony of conquest) and acquired for England the possession over its entire land area.
In the subsequent decades, European powers, even while “peacefully co-existing” within Europe, were engaged in bitter wars in far-off places like India, with each trying to carve out an empire for itself. Third, the “nation” was apotheosised for its own sake; the idea invariably was to make the “nation” strong. This was not just a notion of mercantilism to which it has been obviously ascribed; it underlay even classical political economy. Adam Smith’s magnum opus was titled “An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations” (emphasis added). Smith differed from the mercantilists on what exactly constituted the wealth of nations; but on the need to augment this wealth per se, no matter what it meant for the people, he had no differences with the mercantilists. European “nationalism” in short was an aggrandising nationalism.
Apogee under fascism

It is for this reason that a “nation” like Germany that got formed rather late in the day and therefore came late to the scene of aggrandisement, was even more virulent in its assertion of nationalism to further its aggrandising aims; and this entire process reached its apogee under fascism.
It is also for this reason that the progressive and democratic tradition in Europe, in more recent years, has sought to transcend “nationalism”, after the bitter experience of the two world wars, by setting up the European Union (though that too, not unexpectedly, has not shaken off this aggrandising nationalism which has become associated in modern times with the interests of finance capital and is promoted by it).
It is very important, however, to recognise that the concept of “nationalism” that developed in countries like India during their anti-colonial struggle was of an altogether different kind. Precisely because the struggle was against an immensely powerful adversary, the colonial rulers, it had to be inclusive, to mobilise every possible segment of the population for the cause. Likewise it had to develop solidarity with other such struggles, and for that reason had to have a fraternal rather than an aggrandising relation with other Third World countries. And finally, it had to put the welfare of the “people”, as distinct from the greatness of the “nation” per se, as its central focus, a fact poignantly expressed by Gandhi when he said that the objective of freedom was to “wipe away the tears from the eyes of every Indian”.
An egalitarian nationalism

This was a nationalism which was sui generis, an altogether new phenomenon the like of which the world had not seen earlier. It was essentially a democratic and egalitarian nationalism as opposed to the aggrandising European nationalism, differing from the latter in all the three aspects mentioned earlier.
To say this is not to paint it in rosy colours as a wonderful creature that emerged fully formed like Athena from the head of Zeus. There was indeed an admixture of aggrandisement even within it, but every transgression on its part into aggrandising nationalism has the potential effect, as I argue below, of damaging the project of “nation-building”. It has to be an inclusive democratic nationalism if it is to succeed at all, a proposition whose validity is not altered one iota even though colonialism as such is long over.
When Gandhi in his last days insisted, against the horrendous backdrop of Partition and in opposition to demurring Congress leaders, that India must make full payment of the amount that was due to Pakistan, he was not being “anti-national”; he was merely taking a position in conformity with the democratic “nationalism” underlying the anti-colonial struggle. Central to this nationalism is tolerance, accommodation and negotiation in the event of differences, not the use of brute force to enforce silence and assert hegemony. This nationalism demands that if people from some particular part of the country raise anti-India slogans, then, as long as no terrorism or violence or incitement to violence is involved, that should become an occasion for introspection and analysis, with a view to overcoming the contradiction, rather than for repression by invoking the infamous sedition laws inherited from the colonial era.
BJP’s substitution

What is disturbing today is that the BJP is substituting the first kind of nationalism for the second, an aggrandising nationalism for the democratic nationalism that ideally informed the anti-colonial struggle and that constitutes the conceptual basis of the Indian state. What is worse, the very existence of the second kind of nationalism is being denied, with the terms “national” and “anti-national” being used entirely with reference to the first kind of nationalism.
No doubt, the democratic nationalism of the anti-colonial struggle is not easy to realise. For a start, untrammelled capitalism with its immanently inequalising, even impoverishing, tendencies, cannot possibly constitute the appropriate economic framework for its realisation, a fact recognised by the major leaders of that time, Gandhi, Nehru and Ambedkar (though each of them had a different perception of the requisite framework). But capitalism, albeit restricted by state regulations and surrounded by a public sector, is what came to be instituted; and in due course even these restrictions were removed as the hegemony of globalised finance capital asserted itself and neo-liberal policies were adopted.
The shift to an aggrandising nationalism is clearly linked to the emergence of neo-liberal capitalism in the country; and the BJP which promotes the former is a votary of the latter. But no matter what the circumstances that have conspired to put in office a party committed to an aggrandising nationalism, such a nationalism is fundamentally inimical to the project of building an Indian nation.
Destroying India’s finest institutions

Consider first an obvious point. Here is a government that has sought to browbeat the students at the Pune Film Institute, the Hyderabad Central University, the Jawaharlal Nehru University, and the Department of Fine Arts of the M.S. University of Baroda. These are among the finest institutions in India, and their destruction only makes the country parasitical on institutions located in metropolitan countries. In short, in the name of “nationalism”, we are, paradoxically, making our nation parasitical on advanced nations. But this inevitably follows the promotion of an aggrandising nationalism in a Third World country that prioritises repression over tolerance.
An aggrandising nationalism does not just constrict democracy and freedom of expression, with, as we have seen, lynch mobs taking law into their own hands, sedition laws being applied even to young idealistic and sensitive students, and lies and misinformation being liberally used to tarnish the innocent and discredit them in the public eye. It inevitably generates reactions that are equally extreme. Such an aggrandising nationalism, in short, sets up a disastrous dialectic, of repression generating extreme reaction, which in turn brings forth greater repression, causing even more extreme reaction, and so on.
To believe that the “nation-building” project in a Third World country can survive this disastrous dialectic is a chimera. The Third World in fact is full of so-called “failed states”. Behind these “failed states”, no doubt, one can often see the hand of metropolitan powers; but the modus operandi is invariably through the generation of internal conflicts. This is precisely what an aggrandising nationalism generates.
There is a major difference between the aggrandising nationalism of Europe and its incarnation being invoked in our context: the “enemy within” that the aggrandising nationalism of Europe had identified had consisted typically of a minuscule minority (this is true even of Nazi Germany where the Jews were only about 0.7 per cent of the population); the “enemy within” that an aggrandising nationalism will have to take on in India is far larger. The threat of social disintegration that such “nationalism” brings is correspondingly larger. If India is to avoid the fate of a “failed state” such “nationalism” must be stopped in its tracks.
(Prabhat Patnaik is Professor Emeritus, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.)
Source: The Hindu, 27-02-2016

Apply for postgraduate scholarships to study in UK

University of Southampton, UK, is offering postgraduate taught talent scholarship for 2016 entry. Scholarships of £6,000 are available for up to three students from countries including India who excel in their field.
The scholarships apply to Winchester School of Art and will not apply if the student changes his/her programme to another school/faculty. The application deadline is March 31, 2016.
Only successful students will be notified if they have been awarded a scholarship. The selected students will receive an official reward letter from the university to the email address provided on their scholarship application form.
These scholarships will be awarded by the faculty associate director of internationalisation.
If students are unable to take up your place in 2016 entry and subsequently re-apply for 2017 entry, scholarships will not automatically carry over.
Source: Hindustan Times, 27-02-2016